Glen Powell is enjoying his moment of stratospheric fame.
The Top Gun: Maverick star, 35, attended the Luke Combs concert at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, with his Twisters co-stars Daisy Edgar-Jones, 26, and Anthony Ramos, 32, on Friday.
The three actors made a surprise appearance onstage with the Fast Car crooner, 34, with each of them holding a can of beer.
A countdown ensued and all four of them shotgunned their beers, drinking through a hole punched in the side of the can.
As they finished, the three men threw their empty cans of Miller Light on the stage while Daisy handed her not-quite-empty can to Powell to finish.
Later, the Love You Anyway singer posted a video on Instagram of the moment with the cast of Twisters.
'Hey Twisters cast, what you say we shotgun one?!,' he captioned the post.
Combs has his own connection to Twisters – his Ain't No Love in Oklahoma appears on the country-laden soundtrack.
The film is set in Oklahoma's notorious Tornado Alley and was inspired by 1996's Twister starring the late Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt.
According to a logline from the film, 'Haunted by a devastating encounter with a tornado, Kate Cooper (Edgar-Jones) gets lured back to the open plains by her friend, Javi (Ramos), to test a groundbreaking new tracking system.
'She soon crosses paths with Tyler Owens (Powell), a charming but reckless social-media superstar who thrives on posting his storm-chasing adventures.
'As storm season intensifies, Kate, Tyler and their competing teams find themselves in a fight for their lives as multiple systems converge over central Oklahoma.'
Powell's latest cinematic adventure is being hailed the 'blockbuster of the summer' by critics as the tornado movie sweeps into cinemas almost 30 years after the original.
The new film, which is neither a sequel nor a reboot, debuted in theaters on July 19.
'It's definitely not a reboot. We're not trying to recreate the story from the first one,' Glen shared with Vogue last year.
'It's a completely original story. There are no characters from the original movie back, so it's not really a continuation. It's just its own standalone story in the modern-day.'
'I don't think anyone has brought up this movie in forever, but talking to people, they're like, "That was one of my favorite movies growing up. That movie terrified me,"' he continued.
The Hit Man star paid tribute to the late Paxton in a heartfelt post on X (formerly Twitter).
'As we release Twisters into the world today, I just wanted to look up and tip my hat to the legend that is Bill Paxton.
'A great friend of mine who saw poetry in the natural world. His boots are impossible to fill, but this life is all about chasing the greats,' he wrote alongside of a photo of the two of them.